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Factor‐VIII Activity and Antigen, Platelet Count and Biochemical Changes after Adrenoceptor Stimulation
Author(s) -
Ingram G. I. C.,
Jones R. Vaughan,
Hershgold E. J.,
Denson K. W. E.,
Perkins J. R.
Publication year - 1977
Publication title -
british journal of haematology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.907
H-Index - 186
eISSN - 1365-2141
pISSN - 0007-1048
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2141.1977.tb00565.x
Subject(s) - isoprenaline , salbutamol , practolol , chemistry , platelet , clotting time , endocrinology , clotting factor , medicine , stimulation , heart rate , propranolol , blood pressure , asthma
Adrenaline, isoprenaline and salbutamol were administered by intravenous infusion to human subjects. Isoprenaline was covered with practolol in an attempt to reduce the unpleasantness of the circulatory effects. Changes were recorded in pulse rate and blood pressure, and in blood levels of factors V, VIII, X, XI and XII, platelet count, lactate, pyruvate, potassium and free fatty acids. Factor VIII was studied by clotting assays, by reactions with two rabbit antisera and two human antibodies, and by desulphated agarose chromatography. At the rate at which they were administered, all three drugs increased the pulse rate by 20–40 beats/min. Factor VIII rose c. 2.5 x with adrenaline but only c. 1.5 x with isoprenaline and salbutamol; but other clotting factors did not alter. Chromatography provided no evidence of a change in the size of the molecule carrying factor‐VIII clotting activity. The rate of clearance of the heightened plasma activity could not be shown to differ from that of ‘ordinary’factor VIII infused into haemophiliacs. The platelet count rose after adrenaline, fell after salbutamol and did not change significantly after isoprenaline. Among the biochemical responses, the only significant difference between the drugs was that lactate rose after adrenaline and salbutamol but did not change after isoprenaline. The rise in factor‐VIII clotting activity after adrenaline is considered to represent a real increase in blood concentration, presumably by release of additional factor VIII from stores. The evidence suggests that this could be classified as a β 2 effect; and that the quantity which can be released is unrelated to the current plasma level. The rise in platelet count produced by adrenaline may be the resultant of an α‐mediated rise due to contraction of the exchangeable splenic pool and a β 2 ‐mediated fall, the α effect predominating.